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Monthly Archives: July 2013

Nitrogen large

Nitrogen: a driver of global food insecurity?

July 29, 2013by Lisa Dittmar

With nearly 870 million people chronically undernourished, and progress towards the Hunger Millennium Development Goal ebbing since 2008, feeding the world will continue to be a major global challenge. Proper nitrogen management will be a crucial part of solving our global hunger crisis while ensuring sustainability for future generations.

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    • The Costs of Security Sector Reform: Questions of Affordability and Purpose
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  • Esther Kersley
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    • The UK’s foreign fighters in Syria: rethinking the threat
  • Phillip Bruner
    • ‘Petropolitics’ and the price of freedom
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    • A long road ahead: integrating gender perspectives into peacekeeping operations
  • Omega Research Foundation
    • Floating liabilities? Maritime armouries, risks and solutions
  • Steve Trent
    • Climate refugees: Human insecurity in a warming world
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  • Elizabeth Minor
    • Losing control over the use of force: fully autonomous weapons systems and the international movement to ban them
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    • The Ukraine conflict’s legacy of environmental damage and pollutants
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    • 2015: Towards a brave new nuclear world?
  • Lene Grimstad
    • The UN’s Meetings on Autonomous Weapons: Biting the Bullet, or Lost in Abstraction?
  • Crofton Black
    • Expanding Contracting: The Private Sector’s Role in Drone Surveillance and Targeting
  • Finbar Anderson
    • A Sharper Edge: QME, the Iran Deal and the Gulf Arms Race
  • Lisa Dittmar
    • Nitrogen: a driver of global food insecurity?
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    • US Drone Strikes in Pakistan: ineffective and illegitimate
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    • Self-Defense? Mexico Gambles on Vigilante Security
  • Chris Abbott and Matthew Clarke
    • How to Respond to the Threat from Hostile Drones in the UK
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    • VIDEO – Militarisation of the Sahel: An interview with Richard Reeve
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  • Andrew Noakes
    • Boko Haram: Can a Peace Deal be Negotiated?
  • Doug Weir
    • “The Most Toxic War in History” – 25 Years Later
  • Ben Zala
    • The ‘High Politics’ of Sustainable Security
  • Matt Budd
    • Belize: challenges and contradictions in gang policy
  • Richard Reeve
    • Too Quiet on the Western Front? The Sahel-Sahara between Arab Spring and Black Spring
  • Rachel Staley
    • The Threat of Nuclear Disconnect: Engaging the Next Generation
  • Paul Rogers
    • VIDEO – Transforming Food Systems in a Global Context
  • David Cliff
    • Chemical Weapons Use in Syria: a Test of the Norm
  • Jenny Nielsen
    • Options for Nuclear Disarmament in a Climate of Deterrence
  • Mabel González Bustelo
    • Honduras, the Perfect Storm?
  • Bernard Harborne
    • The Costs of Security Sector Reform: Questions of Affordability and Purpose
  • Sonja Wolf
    • Mexico’s Conflicting Migration Policy Goals: National Security and Human Rights
  • Edward Rackley
    • Security Sector Roles in Sexual and Gender-based Violence
  • Anna Alissa Hitzemann
    • Mali: Another Long War? (Part 2)
  • Caroline Donnellan
    • 10 years of US Drone Strikes in Pakistan – What Impact Has it Had?
  • Janani Vivekananda
    • Deforestation: REDD-y for peace or fuelling conflict?
  • Isabelle Geuskens
    • Shrinking space: The impact of counter-terrorism measures on the Women, Peace and Security agenda
  • Isabel Hilton
    • In Deep Water: China tests its neighbours’ patience
  • Kathryn Hofstra
    • From The Great War to Drone Wars: The imperative to record casualties
  • Wim Zwijnenburg
    • DU-turn? The changing political environment around toxic munitions
  • Esther Kersley
    • Beyond Privacy: The Costs and Consequences of Mass Surveillance
  • Betsy Barkas
    • The UK’s foreign fighters in Syria: rethinking the threat
  • Phillip Bruner
    • ‘Petropolitics’ and the price of freedom
  • RESDAL
    • A long road ahead: integrating gender perspectives into peacekeeping operations
  • Omega Research Foundation
    • Floating liabilities? Maritime armouries, risks and solutions
  • Steve Trent
    • Climate refugees: Human insecurity in a warming world
  • Rebecca Sharkey
    • Momentum towards a nuclear weapons ban treaty: what does it mean for the UK?
  • Elizabeth Minor
    • Losing control over the use of force: fully autonomous weapons systems and the international movement to ban them
  • Zoï
    • The Ukraine conflict’s legacy of environmental damage and pollutants
  • Marianne Hanson
    • 2015: Towards a brave new nuclear world?
  • Lene Grimstad
    • The UN’s Meetings on Autonomous Weapons: Biting the Bullet, or Lost in Abstraction?
  • Crofton Black
    • Expanding Contracting: The Private Sector’s Role in Drone Surveillance and Targeting
  • Finbar Anderson
    • A Sharper Edge: QME, the Iran Deal and the Gulf Arms Race
  • Lisa Dittmar
    • Nitrogen: a driver of global food insecurity?
  • Tim Street
    • Thinking beyond the bomb: how can the UK help create a nuclear weapons-free world?
  • Antoine Perret
    • Privatising the War on Drugs: PMSCs in Colombia and Mexico
  • Murray Carroll
    • Has Paris Opened the Door for a UNSC Climate Court?
  • Alejandro Sanchez
    • From Surveillance to Smuggling: Drones in the War on Drugs
  • Vanda Felbab-Brown
    • Drugs and Drones: The Crime Empire Strikes Back
  • Andrew Holland
    • National Security, Climate Change and the Philippine Typhoon
  • Alise Coen
    • The Responsibility to Protect and the Refugee Crisis
  • Laurence Menhinick
    • What the Environmental Legacy of the Gulf War Should Teach us
  • Duncan Depledge
    • Sustainable Security in the Arctic
  • Cameron Harrington
    • Water Security in South Africa: The need to build social and ecological resilience
  • Chris Abbott
    • US Drone Strikes in Pakistan: ineffective and illegitimate
  • Sarah Kinosian
    • Self-Defense? Mexico Gambles on Vigilante Security
  • Chris Abbott and Matthew Clarke
    • How to Respond to the Threat from Hostile Drones in the UK
  • Mohammed Abu-Nimer
    • Interreligious Peacebuilding: An Emerging Field of Research and Practice
  • SusSec Team
    • VIDEO – Militarisation of the Sahel: An interview with Richard Reeve
  • Zoë Pelter
    • Quiet Legacies and Long Shadows: The Obama era of counterterrorism in the Sahel-Sahara

Blogs We Follow

  • Center for Climate and Security
  • China Dialogue
  • Environmental Peacebuilding
  • Every Casualty
  • Insights: World Resources Institute
  • New Security Beat
  • openSecurity
  • Post2015.org
  • Remote Control Project
  • Southern Voice
  • Tom Dispatch

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  • What is “sustainable security”?
    • The Concept
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    • Marginalisation
    • Militarisation
  • Articles
  • Projects
    • Militarised Public Security in Latin America
    • Rethinking the Nuclear Security Regime
    • Inclusive Security
    • Remote Control Warfare
    • Securitisation of the Sahel-Sahara
    • Human Security in a Changing Climate
  • About Us
    • About the blog
    • Recent Authors
    • Write for us
    • Oxford Research Group

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  • Sustainable Security in the Arctic
  • What the Environmental Legacy of the Gulf War Should Teach us
  • Interreligious Peacebuilding: An Emerging Field of Research and Practice
  • The Responsibility to Protect and the Refugee Crisis
  • How to Respond to the Threat from Hostile Drones in the UK
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